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Dec 4, 2021 11 tweets 5 min read Read on X
On multiple occasions, when Claremont provides insight into Logan’s romantic desires, he’s also conveying Wolverine’s desires for who Logan wants to be, and, in multiple scenes, love interests actually merge into one amalgamated person. #Wolverine #xmen 1/11 Image
In the Claremont/Miller Wolverine miniseries, Logan finds himself torn between Mariko and Yukio. As Yukio tries to seduce him, her face actually shifts to that of Mariko in Logan’s perception, and he subsequently refuses Yukio’s advances. 2/11 Image
We’ve discussed before how Claremont’s notebooks specifically reveal a plan by which Mariko and Yukio represent different life-paths for the character - personifications of his own opposing values and ideals for self-definition. 3/11 Image
Though not the healthiest way to live (you should never place this symbolic burden on your partner), this is a very common narrative strategy with roots in a wide number of classic stories ranging from the Aeneid to Archie comics. Your choice of partner = your choice of self 4/11 Image
In the back half of the run, as Logan’s physical and mental health begin to decline, he twice sees visions of amalgamated love interests. 5/11 Image
The first occurs in the deeply revelatory character study that is UXM Annual #11. Logan first sees Mariko, but when he reflects upon their incompatibility, she is transformed into someone more suited to his lifestyle. Not surprisingly, this involves donning Yukio’s jumpsuit. 6/11 Image
In the aftermath of the Outback era, Logan finds himself tortured at the hands of….The Hand, with Psylocke coordinating a telepathic attack that involves taking different forms of Logan’s loves, before ultimately just combining them into one in an effort to appeal to him. 7/11 Image
Interestingly, this narrative thread would actually be picked up in the movie X2 with a famous scene of Mystique taking the forms of different women as part of her seduction/indictment of Logan. Thus, the symbol seems to extend beyond just the comics . 8/11
What, though, does it mean? If we extend the initial metaphor from the Wolverine mini (that different women represent different life paths), then the repeated amalgamation of them in Logan’s mind can be seen to reflect a sort of identity crisis. 9/11 Image
Just as no particular woman is “the one” for him, no particular life-path is seemingly viable. Logan doesn’t want to be wholly civilized or wholly primal, wholly X-Man/wholly Ronin. He’s torn, rudderless, and that lack of vision might reflect (or accelerate) his decline. 10/11 ImageImage
It’s again a small detail that reveals its greater potential meaning in C’s storytelling through patterned repetition, but it offers some insight into Logan’s state of mind during this difficult period for the character, and helps explain a bizarre recurrence in the story. 11/11 Image

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More from @ClaremontRun

May 30
While the circumstances of Rogue’s absorption of the Carol Danvers persona are surreal and supernatural, they nonetheless provide an intriguing example of the concept of “restorative justice” in a manner that makes a compelling story at the same time. #xmen #rogue 1/9 Image
Restorative justice is a system that focuses on “providing an opportunity for the parties directly affected by the crime – victims, offenders and communities – to identify and address their needs in the aftermath of a crime” instead of simple punishment. 2/9 Image
Though more recently popularized, RJ was commonly practiced by First Nations communities in North America, forming the basis of entire judicial infrastructures (where most Western justice systems, up until recently, focused on the familiar penal structure). 3/9 Image
Read 10 tweets
May 9
As a collaborative medium, comics are sometimes denigrated for their committee approach to character-building, but a closer look at the 'committee' behind Wolverine shows how a character like Logan offers a multifaceted connection to creative genius. #xmen #wolverine 1/10 Image
As noted by Marvel historian Sean Howe, Wolverine was first “named and conceived by Roy Thomas, who detected a need to exploit the Canadian market” before being “developed further by Len Wein and John Romita” ahead of Logan’s debut in “The Incredible Hulk.” 2/10 Image
Throw in Claremont, and the pedigree is quite impressive already. Thomas is perhaps best known as the greatest writer of Conan comics, a character that later artists would draw from quite directly in their interpretations of Wolverine. 3/10 Image
Read 11 tweets
Apr 11
In UXM #220, Claremont takes a moment away from a chaotic era to touch back upon the longstanding, well-evolved relationship between Storm and Wolverine, giving readers another character-revealing scene between this iconic X-Men duo. #xmen #wolverine #storm 1/9 Image
The scene initiates a journey of self-discovery for Ororo, one of many throughout the series but this one will specifically create the rising action for the “Fall of the Mutants’’ event. She has to go alone, but someone has to lead the X-Men in her absence. She recruits Logan 2/9 Image
The power dynamic is foreshadowed in the simple fact that Wolverine (an archetypal hunter) has literally scaled the highest mountain to be alone, but it doesn’t matter. Even without her powers, Ororo has tracked him down. 3/9 Image
Read 9 tweets
Mar 21
In an introductory essay penned in 1980, John Byrne recounts his personal perspective on Jean Grey and her transformation to Phoenix. His candid account paints a less grandiose view on the cultivation of the character within the series than we normally hear. #xmen #JeanGrey 1/7 Image
“I’ve never liked Phoenix. There, I said it...It’s not that I don’t like Jean Grey. I have an abiding fondness for readheads, and have been in love with Jean since we first ‘met,’ about a millions years ago when I was 13.” 2/7 Image
“Granted that her power were not nearly as spectacular as Cyclops’, or Angel’s, or even Iceman’s, but she looked real good in a tight uniform and could – and did – serve to get the X-Men out of tight places.” 3/7 Image
Read 7 tweets
Feb 1
Placing Kitty Pryde into the position of viewpoint character has to represent one of the most groundbreaking decisions within the entirety of the Claremont run – a move that ultimately impacted the series, comics as a whole, and even Western media in powerful ways. #xmen 1/10 Image
The Claremont run begins with Cyclops as the main viewpoint character. Kitty joins the team right at his departure and soon enough takes over as a main viewpoint character for the rest of her tenure, as reflected in our data (noting that Kitty’s only on for 70ish issues). 2/10 Image
At the time of her arrival, Claremont had already executed a turn toward more adult-oriented stories (something that becomes even more pronounced after the death of an X-Man in DPS). It’s therefore perhaps odd to bring on a teen protagonist. 3/10 Image
Read 10 tweets
Jan 25
Despite having all manner of characters (good and evil) express romantic interest in her, Storm’s first canonical love is Forge, a possibly counter-intuitive choice. But this might be the point, as Forge can better connect Ororo to her humanity. #xmen 1/10 Image
Storm is routinely courted (or abducted – or both) by the wealthiest, most powerful beings on the planet/cosmos. She could be a queen, a goddess, a vampire, you name it, but she rejects all of these suitors out of concern for her own independence. 2/10 Image
When asked in interview why it took so long for Storm to receive a relationship partner, Claremont would often reply “because nobody was good enough for her.” 3/10 Image
Read 10 tweets

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